Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 26, 1959)
Locals Patient - Mrs. Dave Slet ten, Phoenix, was a surgery patient at Rogue Valley hos pital Tuesday. Clinic Cancelled - The chest x-ray clinic scheduled at Sacred Heart hospital Thurs day afternoon has been can celled this week, the Jackson County Tuberculosis and Health association, which sponsors the clinic, has an nounced. Dock Damaged Firemen were called about 2:07 ajn. today to put out a fire in rub bish and a mattress under a loading dock at the Medford Bargain house, 442 North Fu st. Damage was confined to three square feet of the dock and the blaze started from a cutting torch used yesterday, iiremen said. - Grandsons Mr. and Mrs. Edward M c Cullough, Fair fax, Va., are parents of twin sons, Glenn Gregory and Ed ward Craig, born this morn ing. Grandparents of the boys are Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Mc- Cullough, 29 North Keeneway dr. The couple have one other child, a girl. ' Meeting Miss Julie John son, executive secretary of the Oregon State Council on Aging, will meet with the ex ecutive board of the Rogue Valley council at 3 pm Thursday, Aug. 27, in the Red Cross building auditorium. Discussed will be plans for the Southern Oregon regional conference on aging. Sale Changed The annual fall rummage sale sponsored by St. Ann's Altar Society of the Sacred Heart Catholic rorch will be held Sept. 4 and 5 in the Annex at Holly and 11th sts. The sale orig inally was scheduled to be held Aug. 29. Hours for the sale are 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. each day. Donations may be made by contacting Mrs. Marie J. Shere, 4057 Carlton ave., Cen tral Point, telephone NOrman- dy 4-2015. Gang Violence Takes Second Life New York (UPD Gang vio lence that erupted on Manhat tan's lower East Side Sunday claimed its second life Tues day night.' Jules Rosario, 14, stabbed In the back during a rumble between the predominantly Negro "Sportsmen" and the prediminantly Puerto Rican "Forsythe Stret Boys' died in Gouverneur hospital. First victim was a 15-year-old Negro girl, Theresa Gee, who was shot down shortly after the gang fight. fl DuHE Good Ddrf Hanging HANGING 1 FRED i i' I MacMURMY ( MAGGIE BATES Vy tfjCg TONITE! ( HUDSON iar simmons V V DOROTHY McCUIRE CLAUDE . fv (fky RAINS js ffftM Tk Nates m4 vr.-W r f jS Sc diliin if itmmJ '''' fm SHIRTS ON V SALE AT BARKERS -4BLl 1 ARE $2.99 UP rSm I I BUT . . . GOSH! MWWI I THEY'RE NC Obituaries MARQUIS MARTIN Ashland Marquis Lome Martin, 79, of 93 Granite st., Ashland, died here Monday, Aug. 24, at 6 p.m. Mr. Martin was born Dec. 25, 1879, in Ontario, Canada, and had been a resident of Ashland for the last three years. He was married to Eliz abeth Irwin April 24, 1915, in Chattham, Alberta, Cana da. The couple lived for 40 vears in Chicago, where he was employed by the Railway Express Agency. He was a member of the Ashland Pres byterian church. Mr. Martin is survived by his wife and one son, L. I Martin, Ashland, and three grandchildren, in addition to two sisters, Mrs. Walter Ure, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, and Mrs. James Sernie, San. Francisco, and a brother, A. E Martin, of Calgary, Alberta. Funeral services will be held Thursday, Aug. 27, at 10 a.m. in Litwiller s Moun tain View chapel. The Rev. B. J. Holland of Ashland Presbyterian church will offi ciate. Interment will be in Mountain View cemetery. DORA BURROWS Mrs. Dora Burrows, route 1, Gold Hill, died this morn ing in a local hospital. Funer al arrangements will be an nounced by Conger - Morris, funeral directors. JAMES M. MEAD The body of James Martin Mead, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Andy Mead, of Eagle Point, has been forwarded by Conger-Morris, funeral direc tors, to Clovis, Calif., for serv ices and interment. The baby was born Aug. 4, 1959, in Medford, and survi vors in addition to the par ents include a brother, Clif ford; and grandparents, Mrs. Evelyn Mead, Visalia, Calif., and Mr. and Mrs. George Fahen, Clovis, Calif. JAMES I. CASSAL. Funeral services for James Ira Cassal, 66, of Shady Cove, who died Monday, will be held at Conger-Morris Funeral home Thursday at 1:30 p.m. Chaplain Roger Pryor, of Camp White domiciliary, will officiate. Committal will be at Siskiyou Memorial park, with military services han dled by Steelhead post VFW, Shady Cove, of which he was a member. Honorary pallbearers will include Ralph Watson, Mont Preston, Frank Busch, Oren Train, Bob Bush, and Ray Briggs. Active pallbearers will include Jack E. Dyer, Kenneth L. Oliver, A. H. Birch, Edward W. Learning, John L. Wilson, and Dan F. Krotz. Mr. Cassal was born June 11, 1893, in Burke, Ky., and had lived in Shady Cove for the past eight years. He was a veteran of, World War I, serving from May 24, 1918, to May 24, 1919, in Company F, 109th Infantry. Survivors include his wife, Mary; a sister, Mrs. C. P. Baker, West Vancouver, B.C. and four brothers, Elbert Cas sal, Calloway Cassal, Montrey Cassal and Wilburn Cassal, all in Washington. JAMES F. LYNCH Requiem Mass for James F. Lynch, 79, who died in Salem last Sunday, was held at the Sacred Heart Catholic church this morning. The Rev. Wil liam McLeod officiated. Inter ment was in the Medford IOOF cemetery. Mr. Lynch was born in Illinois Dec. 24, 1880, and is the brother of the late David L. Lynch and Mary J. Estes. Survivors include five nieces, Mrs. Alice Pairan of Portland; Mrs. John White of Medford; Mrs. John Thomson of San Diego; Mrs. Conrad Johnson of Klamath Falls, and Lenore Estes of Medford; three nephews, Thomas J. Estes, John J, Estes, both of Portland; and Keith Estes of Medford. Perl Funeral home was in charge of arrange ments. Average hourly wage of U.S. factory employees in the U.S. has increased 800 per cent since 1913 tabulations. Total Solar Eclipse Due On October 2 Washington-(Science Serv- ice)-One of the world's most spectacular heavenly displays, a total eclipse of the sun, will occur at sunrise on Oct. 2 in the eastern United States. Only those lucky enough to live m or travel to a nar row belt of eastern Massa chusetts that includes Boston or southern New Hampshire will be able to see the total phase, weather permitting. Millions in the eastern U. S., however, will be able to view a partial-eclipse, if clouds do not interfere. Wholly Covered The sun will be wholly cov ered by the moon for watch ers in a narrow strip extend ing from Massachusetts across the Atlantic Ocean to the Ca nary Islands, then through the Sahara Desert, the Sudan and Ethiopia, ending in the Indian Ocean. The eclipse occurs at 5:30 a.m. EST in the 'Boston area. Outside this ribbon observ ers will see the sun partially eclipsed over a vast area reaching from Greenland to the southern part of Africa, and from Michigan to Mos cow. Studies Hindered Over the eastern United States, the sun will already be blotted out when it rises. In New York, for instance, the partial eclipse ends about an hour after sunrise, while in Ann Arbor, Mich., it is finished only 16 minutes after sunrise. Because the sun will be so low on the horizon from the Boston area during the total phase, scientific studies will be hindered by the extreme thickness of the atmosphere through which the eclipse must be viewed. Much more suitable observations can be made from the Canary Islands, a Spanish possession near the coast of northwest Africa. Youngest Astronomer Conducting eclipse studies there will be teams of scien tists, from Sacramento Peak Observatory, Sunspot, N. M., the High Altitude Observa tory, Boulder, Colo, the Uni versity of Minnesota, the University of Wisconsin, the National Bureau of Standards Boulder Laboratories and the Naval Research Laboratory. Youngest astronomer on these teams wil be Tim Wyngaard, a 17-year-old school boy of Madison, Wis., who has been sponsored by the National Academy of Sciences as junior member of an observing team. A total solar eclipse oc curs when the moon comes between the sun and . the earth, blotting out the sun's light for a brief time for those in a narrow path on the earth's surface. Natural Gas Near For So. Oregon Salem - (DPI - Public Utility Commissioner Jonel C. Hill today was assured that natural gas is in the near future for the potential industrial area of southern Oregon. The Pacific Gas Transmis sion company, which has an application before the Federal Power Commission to build a $129,588,000 natural gas pipe line from the Canadian border to California, told the com missioner it is allocating part of its pipeline capacity for transportation and resale to Oregon consumers. Hearing on the application has been set by the FPC for Oct. 15 in Washington, D. C. Hill previously indicated he would represent the people of Oregon at the hearing. Peoria Student Gets Soviet Data Peoria, 111. (UPD A Peoria high school junior received a letter from the Kremlin in reply to his request for in formation on Russian earth satellites. The youth, James Allen spach, got a packet containing two pamphlets about Sputniks I and H along with the letter. The letter, signed by N. P. Slovokhopova, scientific col laborator of the Astronomical Council, U.S.S.R. Academy of Science, expressed regret that a booklet dealing with Sput nik III was not yet available. Only" one thing troubled James. The letter was in Eng lish, all right. But the pamph lets were in Russian. The country's wettest state in terms of average rainfall up to 1957 was Louisiana with 57.34 inches. The driest state was Nevada, with '8.60 inches. The U.S. average is 29 inches of rain per year. The five largest U.S. cor porations in sales and assets are General Motors, Standard Oil of New Jersey, Ford Motor Co., U. S. Steel Corp., and General Electric Co. Steel Prices Pace Stock Market Hiqher New YorteMUPD-Steel stocks paced the market higher to day. Gains running to around a point or more were chalked up by Allegheny-Ludlum, Lu kens, Wheeling, U.S. Steel and Youngstown. Carpenter Steel at its high was up almost 7 points. American Motors led its group higher. Chemicals, air craft, electronics, drugs and metals all leaned toward the upside. Oils were mixed Rails moved within a narrow range. On the downside, - Bruns-wick-Balke lost more than 3 at its low, while Loew's was off around 2,' Kerr-McGee more than 1, and U.S. Play ing Card more than 3. DOW-JONES AVERAGES New York - (CPD - Dow Jones final slock averages: 30 industrials 657.57, up 1.61; 20 railroads 162.53, up 0.11; 15 utilities 91,28, off 0.26. and 65 stocks 219.05, up 0.24. Sales today were about 2,210.000 shares compared with 1,960,000 shares Tuesday. Today's prices on selected stocks: Allied Chemical 117 Alum Co Am 110V American Can 44 American Motors 45V A T & T 79 Armco Steel 76 Bendix Aviation ,69 Boeing Air 32 Caterpillar Corp 102 Chrysler Corp 66 Du Pont . 268 Eastman Kodak 91 Firestone ..130 General Electric 81 General Foods 96 General Motors .... 55 Georgia Pacific . 41 Graham Paige 2 Greyhound 21 Gulf Oil ........111 Homestake Mining 40 Idaho Power 47 IBM .....425 Int Paper ; 132 Kaiser Ind 16 Johns-Manville ........ 55 Kennecott Copper .;......lt)2 Lockheed Aircraft 27 Katy 5 Montana Power Co ...... 25 Montgomery Ward 52 V4 National Biscuit 52 New York Central 29 Pac Gas & Elec 63 Penney, J C 107 Over 80 Million Registered Drivers Washington-(UPD-More than half the people in the United States are registered drivers. A report by the Bureau of Public Roads shows that more than 80 million Americans have been issued driving per mits. It also shows that 67,135,- 546 autos, trucks and buses jammed the streets and high ways last year-more than one for every three U.S. resi dents. The 1957 total represents an increase of only 3 per cent over 1956. This is the smallest climb since 1952, and isless than half the average yearly 6.5 per cent gain since World War II. Increasing faster were fed eral, state and local spending for streets and highways. Out lays totaled $5,770,000,000 last year, compared with $1,- 413,000,000 a decade ago. Vehicles registered last year included 55,906,195 passenger cars. Two Die in Crash Near Grants Pass Grants Pass (UPD A San Francisco couple was killed instantly and a truck driver injured seriously . Tuesday afternoon in a two vehicle collision on Highway 99 about 23 miles north of here. Dead were- Earl Callahan, 70, and his wife, 61. In Jose phine General hospital here in serious condition was Lewis Lively, 41, Ashland. State police said the Calla han's station wagon was south bound and the truck driven by Lively north bound when they collided just north of Wolf Creek. Yachting Pacifist Faces Jury Trial Honolulu-flIPD-A jury of 10 women and two men began hearing testimony today in the retrial of yachtsman Earle D. Reynolds, charged 'with violating Atomic Energy commission regulations by en tering the Eniwetok area dur ing nuclear test in July, 1958. The jury was chosen Tues day before Judge John Rose, who again denied defense motions to postpone the trial until a later date. The yachting pacifist asked the postponement to further prepare his defense. He said he planned to call a Japanese radiologist from Osaka, Japan to testify on the effects of atomic radiation on humans. Penn RR ... nit Radio Corporation 62 Richfield Oil 82 Safeway . 38 Sears ....... 47 Shell Oil 82 Socony Mobil Oil 44 Southern Co 4034 Southern Pacific (xd) 74 Standard California 51Va Standard Indiana 461. Standard N J .... 514 Sun Mines (xd) 6 Texas Co 82 V Texas Gulf Sulfur . 20 Tex Pac Land Trust...... 21 Transamerica ; 32 Trans World Air 20Vs Tri-Continental 40 Union Carbide liVA Union Pacific . 33 United Aircraft 43 1 4 United Air Lines ..... 38V4 U S Rubber ...... 61 U S Steel ...104 Youngstown S & T 141 Twelve Lodged In City Jail This Morning by Police Twelve men were lodged in the city jail by Medford po lice between midnight and 3:30 o'clock this morning, po lice reported today. The men were arrested at various spots along the South ern Pacific railway tracks in the downtown area. Ten were charged with vagrancy, one disorderly conduct, and one for being drunk in public. The majority of the arrests followed a report by the city fire department at 2:10 a.m. that a small mattress under a dock at the rear of the Med ford Bargain House, 442 North Fir st., was on fire. Appearing i n municipal court this morning and plead ing guilty to the charges were Clifford Roosevelt Coatney, Elgin, Kan., disorderly con duct; Dillard Elwood Landers, South Houston, Texas; George Roderick Grimmins, Klamath Falls; Ralph Homer Hall, Charles K. Ross, Robert Lodge Widmark, Howard Byron Simpson, John Ben Lyerly, all transients; Kent Vanar Lindsay, general delivery, Medford, and . Wilmore Fran cis Dickerson, Merced, Calif., all charged with vagrancy, and each given 20 day sen tences which were suspended by the judge. Richard Rangle Matthew Scott, Camp White Domicil iary, also charged with va grancy, was given a 30-day suspended sentence after he pleaded guilty to the charge. Earl Hester Mayberry, Ba kersfield, Calif., was sen tenced to five days in the city jail or fined $10 in municipal court after pleading guilty to a charge of drunk in public. Alaska's Name Traced To Spain Jerez de la Frontera, Spain (UPD Jose Rivera Gonzalez, an amateur lexicologist, says he believes that Alaska is named after Andalusia in southern Spain. Senor Gonzaleb makes bar rels for the storage of sherry in the many famed bodegas in this city. As a hobby, he likes to trace the origin of geographic names. As to Alaska, he points out that this word was the Rus sian way of saying Aleutian, the original Eskimo name for both the Aleutian Islands and the mainland of the 49th state. "Where did they get this word Aleutian?" he asks. "I think the Eskimos heard some eariy Spanish traveler de scribe Andalusia as the para dise it is known to be and then the Eskimos decided to take the name for their own land. So really we should speak of the Andalusian Islands, Andalusia not Alas ka." Request for Money Leads To 30 Days Mineola, N. Y. (UPD When accused burglar Rod Carpen tier, 38, was freed on bail from the Nassau county jail, he forgot to pick up the $2 he had left with the jailer when he was sent to his cell. So, two days later, he hop ped in a car and drove to the jail to get the money. The jail er was willing to turn it over if Carpentier would produce LriTEl ItCnCfiDn till I CL lilCUrUnll A. i : ft " lit IS aw UnV -PELLETS OF RADIOACTIVE aue injected- THE BCCVTOWU. jr2& . . . diseased tissue. FESTIVAL PLAYS Tonight: "King John." Thursday: "Measure for Measure." Friday: "Antony and Cleo patra." Saturday: "Twelfth Nighi" and "Maske." Curtain Time 8:30 p.m. Bus from Medford leaves Medford hotel at 7:30; Jackson hotel 7:35 p.m. Russians Develop Ultrasonic Plan To Find Sea Fish Washington-(Science Serv ice) - Russian scientists have developed an ultrasonic meth od for locating schools of fish from a helicopter. It has prov ed to be far faster and more accurate than visual or acous tic methods using, shipboard instruments. To locate herring, ancho vies, and the larger tunny or horse mackerel, the helicopter hovers about 50 feet above the water. A sound projector, or microphone, is lowered into the water on a wire. Thirteen to 20 feet above the microphone, a stream lined float is attached by wire. The wire from the float leads up to the helicopter, where it is attached to a depth-sounding instrument. The float and microphone are towed over the area at speeds ranging up to 10 miles an hour while a technician at the instrument panel watches tracings sent up from the microphone and recorded on tape. Yields Size, Shape Interpretation of the re ceived ultrasonic signals yields the size and shape of the fish schools, their depths, and the species of fish. This information then can be radioed to nearby fishing boats. When the fishermen know the amount and kind of fish below the surface, they can prepare the proper trawl or seine gear for the fish they expect to catch. This method of fish finding, reported by the Fish and Wildlife Service of the De partment of Interior here, has several advantages: A heli copter can cover a fishing area much faster than a pa trol boat; the fish are not frightened by the helicopter as they might be by a sur face vessel; and a helicopter can operate over rough water that would slow the efforts of a patrol boat or make sur- r 1 : race reaaings inaccurate. i The new method reportedly is being used to locate herring in the Caspian Sea; cod and herring in the Barents Sea and in Far Eastern waters; and anchovies, sprat, scad and horse mackerel in the Black and Azov Seas. identification-such as a dri ver's license. i "I don't have a driver's li cense," said Carpentier, whereupon the jailer arrested him on charges of driving without one, and a judge sent him back to jail for 30 days. CANDLE ROOM Charcoal Broiled STEAKS An especially good place to eat if dieting! 530 p.m. till 12:00 Weekdays Sundays 4 p.m. till 11 p.m. ATOMIC MEDICINE AS AAM UNLOCKS THE GSXEB OP THE ATOM, ffAPiCACTIVE EMQcGy FINDS WOfEASNB USE IM MEDICAL SCIENCE. A COBALT "GUN" shoots radioactive: pays into cahcexous tissue CAUSING DESmOONOF CANCEROUS CEUS. 0 GOLD into ATOMIC DETECTIVE... THE MOVEMENT OF RAPICACTIVE SUBSTANCES INTCOPUCED INTO THE BCPV CAN BE FOLLOWED V ISINSA GEIGEf? COUNTS?. THIS Aids scientists in diagnosing and in studies cf osculation. Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Variable cloudiness and a little cooler through Thursday. Low tonight 50. High Thursday 85. Western Oregon: Fair tonight and Thursday except night and morning clouds with local fog or drizzle along coast and over north interior. Low tonight 50-56. High Thursday 70-80 in north, 80-85 in south, 55-65 on coast. Northern California: Fair to night and Thursday except low overcast and local fog on coast. Cooler over most of interior Thurs day. LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE : Mean yester day 72; above normal 2. Record high this date 104 in 1924. Record low this date 42 in 1920. PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to midnight, none. Midnight to 10 a ju. none. Total this month .28 inch., 4.96 inches below normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 15, highest this a.m. 85. High. 4:30 24 City . Yester- i.m. hr. day Low Prec. -tsrooKings 55 Grants Pass . 94 Klamath Falls 83 MEDFORD 91 51 46 49 50 59 Portland 85 T mw i fill Seattle 78 57 Spokane 76 58 Yakima 84 60 T Eureka 57 51 Red Bluff 97 68 Sacramento 95 57 San Francisco .. 62 55 Los Angeles 81 66 Phoenix 98 .80 58 77 77 72 75 Denver 78 Chicago .. 94 Miami Beach 86 New York 82 Washintgon, D. C. 94 .13 . FIVE-DAY FORECAST (Through Aug. 31): Western Oregon - Western Wash ington Temperatures averaging below normal. A few showers in western Washington and north west Oregon. High temperatures genrally 64-74 in western Washing ton, 75-85 in western Oregon, ex cept 60-65 on coast. Low tonight 46-54. Northern California No precipi tation except for scattered thun derstorms in high mountain areas at times. Temperatures normal or above. Investment Funds Noon Quotations on selected funds supplier bv th Mdford Branch of Foster & Marshall, mem bers New York Stock Exchange Fond Bid Asked Bullock 14.06 15.42 Chem Fund 11.61 12.56 Eaton Howard Stk 24.81 26.52 Fidelity 16.85 18.22 Gas Ind 13 38 14.62 Group Sec Avia Elec 10.15 11.12 Group Sec Com Stk 13.66 ' 14.95 Group Sec Petr 10.76 11.79 Group Sec Steel .. 11.58 12.68 Group Sec Tobac 8.02 8.79 Keystone B-3 16.22 17.71 Keystone B-4 10.32 11.26 Keystone K-2 14.93 16.30 Keystone S-l 19.90 21.72 Keystone S-2 13.14 1434 Keystone S-3 15.44 16.85 Keystone S-4 12.53 13.67 Mass Inv Grth Stk 14.40 15.57 TV-Elec 15.73 17.14 Value Line Inc 5.81 6.35 Wellington 14.65 15.79 Dock 'II Ml I I Featuring IN PERSON I Si Mr. Rock 'n Roll I ftl Himself I "FATS" ! m J. D0f I llys Cl AMERICA'S ) i MOST VERSATILE I tk DANCE SAN9 and hi. GREAT i . aAa(Ui) ORCHESTRA fj 18 Gold Records including J MS "I'm Wallcin " "Bo Wet- L vil," "Blueberry Hill," C T7 A Gk ' "Margie. A IS! SAL, AUG. 29 sammAr. I $2.50 Per Person I I DANCING 9-1 Ijl BIRTHS BRYDEN- To Mr. and Mrs. Allen James, 3074 South Pa cific highway, Grants Pass, Aug. 26, 1959, a boy, 7?4 pounds, in Rogue Valley hos pital. . Portland Livestock Portland (UPI) (USDA) Cattle 400. High good 1108 lb. fed steers 27.65; utility steers and heifers 22.50-23.50; utility cows 16-17; canners-cutters 13-14.50; medium stocker feeder steers and heifers 20-23. Calves 75. Good-choice vealers 27-30; same grade slaughter calves 25-28. Hogs 350. U.S. 1 and 2 butchers 180-210 lb. 17.25-17.50; some 17.75; mixed 1, 2 and 3 grade 180-235 lb. 16.50-17; 350-550 lb. sows 12-14. Sheep 1000. Mostly choice cen tral Oregon slaughter lambs 20; good-choice nearby lambs 18.50 19.50; No. 2 pelt shorn lambs good choice 18.50-18.75; cull-good ewes 2.50-4. Portland Produce Portland (UPI) Dairy market: Eggs To retailers: Grade AA ex tra large. 50-53c doz.; AA large, 47-50c; A large, 44-47c; AA me dium, 37-40c; AA small, 26-28C, car tons l-3c additional. Butter To retailers: AA and grade A prints, 67c lb.; carton, lc higher; B prints, 65c. Cheese medium cured To re tailers: A grade Cheddar single dai sies, 41-51c; processed American cheese, 5-lb. loaf, 40-43c. Farm Market First Lake Labish district yellow Danver onions were due on the market today; the crop carried a wholesale market value of 1.50 for 50 lb. bags of No. 1 grade; Elberta peaches offered at the East Side Farmers market at mostly 1.75; best corn brought 2.75 for 5 doz en ears; Yakima green peppers were 2.75-3 for a 30-lb. box. Poultry, Rabbits Live Chickens Quoted to grow ers at Portland, Salem and south to Eugene, f.o.b. ranch. No. 1 qual ity fryers, 234-4 lbs., 18-19c lb.; It. hens. 8c; heavy hens, 10c lb. Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade dressed to retailers: Fryers, whole drawn. 34-38c lb.; cut up, 39-43c; hens, heavy type whole drawn. 35 38c; light-type cut up. 29-34c lb. Dressed Turkeys To producers, A grade young hens, up to 28c lb. on an oven-ready basis; A grade young toms, 26c lb on same basis. To retailers, A grade young hens 36-39c on same basis; A grade young toms. 34-45c lb., depending upon weight; A grade.fryer-roaster turkeys, mostly 28c to producers on oven ready basis and 39-43c to retailers. Rabbits (average to growers f.o.b. killing plants) Live white, 33,i-4i,i lbs., f.o.b. Portland, 19 21c; colored pelts. 5c under. Fresh killed fryers to retailers. 56-58c lb.; cut up, 60-62c. Portland Hay Portland Wholesale hay prices: New crop No. 2 green alfalfa, baled, f.o.b. Portland and Seattle, $34-35 a ton; some to $36 at Port land. Over-the-Counter Western Stocks The tollowlnt bid and asked prices on selected Western securi ties provided by the Medford branch office of Pacific Northwest Company arc unofficial and do not represent artua1 transactions but are intended as a guide to the appro-irnt price range Common Stocks Bid Asked Bank of America 47 50'i cam. -Pacific t unities 34 Cascades Plywood 37 Cons. Freightways 22 H Copco 37 3b ;s 393 23 U 39 60 3634 18 2 40 Ta 28 3 28 ?g First National Bank 56 Morrison-Knudsen Northwest Nat. Gas Pacific Pwr. & Lt. Permanente Cement Portland Gen. Elec. . 34'i 17'i 38 27 ' 27 U. S. National Bank 67 71 353, 274 46 '4 United Utilities 33 'i West Coast Tel 25 Weyerhaeuser 44 NOW PLAYING ONE SHOWING ONLY DOORS OPEN 7:00 p.m. SHOW STARTS 7:30 p.m. BRIGITTF" BARDOT V V "LOVE IS MY PROFESSION" ALSO COMING Thurs.Aug.27 CORRAL Admission $1.50 S5i OOODSlW offear m A .r:vml.iMTWNT.Ov;Al ttHAM g MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. A Wednesday, Aug. 26, 195 Highest mountain peak in North America is Mt. McKin ley in Mt. McKinley national park in Alaska. pirns Repairing and Relining Cleaning and Glazing Restyling Frances' Fars 6 10 Valley 1 AME PHONE SP: View SAT 1 2-6526 Larani fl ENDS TOFIITE ROD STEIGER FAY SPAIN And a Swell Western iNTiir.Cn'. TBonrstivHsr KXtBTfUattt J AUtOMIN 4 THEATRE INFORMATION SERVICI CALL SP 3-7323 -FOR FULL INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR THEATRES $1.00 PER CARLOAD STARTING TONITE TWO GREAT TOP FEATURES The Air Fore Will Navar b Tni Sam Again I ANDY GRIFFITH JAMES DEAN PLAYS HIMSELF IN VJff ft Stoqv ' . - irfl m A RIVE-IN HURRY ENDS SOON wm 6That Certain Peeling -M, KAH MUTT TECHNICOLOR t--MWT MCVuM 1 - F S HIS TRUE, CS SHOCKING YH STORYI ?'.f? IMF DRIVE-IM fe pJWUTHPAClFIC mtWMrif' ( K99 maW TONY CURTIS ! JACK